natureindex.com

Sitemap

Sign up

Nature Index

  • Home
  • News
    • News home
    • Listings
    • News
    • Comment
    • Nature Index 360°
    • Q&A
    • Dataviz
    • News archive
  • Current Index
    • Institution tables
    • Institutions A-Z
    • Research highlights
    • Country/territory tables
    • Articles
    • Collaborations
    • City maps
    • Custom tables
    • Custom graphs
  • Annual tables
    • 2020 tables
    • 2019 tables
    • 2018 tables
    • 2017 tables
    • 2016 tables
  • Supplements
    • Nature Index supplements
    • Nature Index 2020 Artificial Intelligence
    • Nature Index 2020 Germany
    • Nature Index 2020 Science Cities
    • Nature Index 2020 South Korea
    • Nature Index 2020 Cancer
    • Nature Index 2019 Materials Science
    • Nature Index 2019 Collaboration and Big Science
    • Nature Index 2019 Young Universities
    • Nature Index 2019 Biomedical Sciences
    • Nature Index 2019 Japan
    • Nature Index 2018 China
    • Nature Index 2018 Science Cities
    • Nature Index 2018 Rising Stars
    • Nature Index 2018 Earth and Environmental Sciences
    • Nature Index 2018 Japan
    • Nature Index 2017 Science Inc.
    • Nature Index 2017 United States
    • Nature Index 2017 Science Cities
    • Nature Index 2017 Saudi Arabia
    • Nature Index 2017 Innovation
    • Nature Index 2017 China
    • Nature Index 2017 Japan
    • Nature Index 2016 Collaborations
    • Nature Index 2016 Australia and New Zealand
    • Nature Index 2016 Rising Stars
    • Nature Index 2016 Saudi Arabia
    • Nature Index 2016 Japan
    • Custom reports
  • Client services
    • Client services
    • 2020 Brochure
  • About
    • FAQ
    • Glossary of terms
    • Knowledge base
    • Nature Index journals
    • Journal selection
    • Using the Index
    • Newsletter signup
  1. Home
  2. Articles
  3. The mutational landscape of normal human endometrial epithelium

The mutational landscape of normal human endometrial epithelium

Journal: Nature

Published: 2020-04-22

DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2214-z

Affiliations: 12

Authors: 25

Go to article
Institutions Authors Share
Sanger Institute Cancer, Ageing and Somatic Mutation Programme, United Kingdom (UK)
0.70
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom (UK)
0.06
Warwick Medical School (WMS), United Kingdom (UK)
0.04
Department of Surgery, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (UK)
0.03
NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (Cambridge BRC), United Kingdom (UK)
0.03
Department of Hematology, Erasmus MC, Netherlands
0.02
Inivata, United Kingdom (UK)
0.02
European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), United Kingdom (UK)
0.02
Department of Medicine, MSKCC, United States of America (USA)
0.02
Department of Pathology, MSKCC, United States of America (USA)
0.02
Human Oncology and Pathogenesis Program (HOPP), MSKCC, United States of America (USA)
0.02
Department of Haematology, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (UK)
0.01

Return

Latest supplement

Nature Index 2020 Artificial Intelligence

Nature Index 2020 Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence is one of the most rapidly advancing and controversial topics in scientific research. As investments and revenues soar year-on-year and nations vie for leadership in the field, AI research output continues its steep, upward trajectory. But there are significant ethical and technical challenges to overcome.

Access free

Nature Index 2020 Germany

Nature Index 2020 Germany

Germany's position as a research giant is defined by its strong and steady science funding and long-term investment in basic research. But although national science organizations are thriving under funding certainty, there are concerns that some universities will be left behind.

Access free

Sponsored content

  • Discover the latest research from Ireland

Contact us
Follow us on Twitter
Follow us on Facebook

Research highlights of partners

Immune cells worsen the effects of brain injury

F. Hoffmann-La Roche AG

8 Sep 2017

Copepods cope by moving swiftly on

Deakin University

27 Sep 2017

How parental diet can affect offspring’s health

University of Tsukuba

31 Jan 2021

Research highlights

Sign up for the free weekly Nature Index newsletter
Sign up

Useful links

  • FAQ

  • User tips

  • The Nature Index journals

Advertisement

Enhanced profiles

  • FAQ
  • Client Services
  • Institution outputs
  • Country outputs
  • News
  • Supplements
  • Privacy policy
  • California Privacy Statement
  • Use of cookies
  • Manage cookies/Do Not Sell My Info
  • Legal notice
  • Terms
  • Nature.com
  • Nature News
  • Nature Careers
  • Nature Asia-Pacific

Springer Nature

Except where otherwise noted © 2021 Springer Nature Limited. All Rights Reserved.
partner of AGORA, HINARI, OARE, INASP, ORCID, CrossRef and COUNTER